Emre bekommt 24 Teile von 60. Das als Bruch geschrieben lässt sich das einfach runterkürzen, indem du beide Zahlen durch 12 teilst. Also ist der Anteil 2/5 ( zwei Fünftel)
In the cartoon, which is a black-and-white drawing, you can see two men that are facing each other. The man on the left is small and lean. His clothes are torn. The man on the right appears to be strong and wealthy because of his business suit and bag. The cartoon includes a speech which is called "Australian mateship and the use of the word Mate". In addition to that there are two speech bubbles. The smaller man asks the taller man: "Exuse me mate. Could you spare a couple of dollars for a cup of coffee?". The strong man answers: "Sorry mate."
The words in the cartoon underline the cartoonists message. The cartoonist wants to show the viewer that the word mate does not always have the same meaning. You can say that there are two types of mateship. One of them is, that mates spend a lot of time together and tell eachother their secrets. But in this cartoon the viewer gets the impression that the men meet for the first time and they are not mates. The small man wants the strong man to help him but he did not want to do that and excused himself in a friendly way.. But its apparent, that, apart of the clothes, he has enough money and could spend some of it. With that, the cartoonist shows, that australian people are friendly and polite to eachother and for this reason they use the word "Mate". But this situation does not agree to the real meaning of "mateship", because real mates would always help eachother. In this cartoon, the strong man is avaricous but he excuses himself politely.
der letzte Abschnitt is ok, außer dem letzten Wort (peoples-->people)